This blog is a personal take on Listowel, Co. Kerry. I am writing for anyone anywhere with a Listowel connection but especially for sons and daughters of Listowel who find themselves far from home. Contact me at listowelconnection@gmail.com

Month: June 2020 Page 2 of 5

Jim Cogan, Micheál Martin

The Men in My Life

My husband, Jim, passed away on June 23 2013, a few short months after this photo was taken by John Stack. The man with him in the photo is our son, Bobby.

Before he died, Jim was quadriplegic. The protectors you see on his hands were to prevent his nails digging into his palms as he could no longer straighten his fingers. The button to the right of his head in the photo he operated with his forehead to bring the chin control back in front of his face so he could drive the wheelchair independently. The screen mounted on his left hand side shows his environmental control. With it he could turn on the computer, the TV, the light or the heater.

Jim bore his illness (M.S.) with extraordinary forbearance and he harnessed  every piece of assistive technology he could find to give him the independence which disease had so cruelly denied him.

Today we remember him with love and admiration.

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When Micheál Martin came to town

Someone will surely tell us the date. probably before the 2016 election as I see John Brassil to the fore. Also in the photo are Eilish Wren, Liz Dunne, Jimmy Moloney, Máire Logue and Ned O’Sullivan

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Have you ever milked a cow?


I cant say that I was ever any good at it but I have tried. It is a very skilful job and requires the building up of a trusting relationship between cow and milker. Women are often good at it. It has been known for a cow to have a favourite milkmaid and to require to be spanceled if anyone other than her favourite approaches her, bucket in hand. An essential piece of equipment for milking is the stool.

This photo was posted on the Vanishing Ireland site by John Coffey. The ones I remember were round.

Michael McFadden R.I.P., Moloneys and Flowers

Beautiful Kingfisher

Photo; Chris Grayson

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Moloney’s


Moloneys was once one of the biggest employers in Listowel. The garage and car dealership was, at one time, located on Market Street where Spar is now.

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Flowers back on the streets



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A Convent Pantomine


Anyone any idea who these young ladies are?

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Do you Remember the fit ups?

I remember well the anticipation and excitement when McFadden’s travelling roadshow came  on its annual visit to Kanturk. The players set up their makeshift theatre and presented a different show every night for a week. I remember The Colleen Bawn was a staple. As well as the play there would be a talent show with local singers, dancers and musicians invited to take part. There would always be a raffle. It was my first introduction to live theatre and it was brilliant. We had Up Cork shows and local pantomines in The Edel Quinn Hall and, of course, the circus but the full week of entertainment was the highlight of my cultural calendar back then.

 

I didn’t know the Listowel connection until I read the following obituary in the Kildare Nationalist.

ATHY MOURNS PASSING OF MICHAEL MCFADDEN WHO HAD SHOW BUSINESS IN HIS BLOOD

 

 

The death has occurred in Athy of popular and highly respected former showman Michael McFadden.

  

Michael, who was a member of the well known show family, was a fantastic and talented musician who played with numerous groups during his life. He passed away peacefully surrounded by his loving family on Sunday last 14 June. 

His passing is deeply regretted by his loving wife Dinah, children Evelyn, Bernadette, Theresa, Frank, Ann and Malissa, brothers Frank and Marcus, grandchildren, great-grandchildren, extended family and friends.

A private funeral Mass will take place, due to government advice regarding public gatherings. The funeral Mass will be live-streamed on St. Michael’s Parish Church, Athy, website tofday Tuesday morning at 11am, see www.parishofathy.ie.

Here we reprint an extra t from an eye on the Past column by Frank Taaffe on Michael’s life published in the Kildare Nationalist  in 1995.

Michael’s grandparents operated the Belfast Hippodrome over 100 years ago. James McFadden, his grandfather, was a violinist and his grandmother Catherine the business woman who ran the Hippodrome for many years. Artists were brought to Belfast from abroad for the weekly shows produced on the Hippodrome stage and strange to relate one of those acts were John and James Duffy who were later to establish the famous Duffys Circus. The Hippodrome in time was to close and the McFaddens took to the road crossing and re-crossing the 32 counties with the McFadden Variety Roadshow.

Michael’s father married Catherine Hayes, daughter of the owner of Hayes Roadshow and both continued to travel with the McFaddens Road Show. With the usual mixture of variety acts followed by a second half film show road shows were popular in every town and village in Ireland. Travelling by caravan pulled by horses in the early years and later by motorised power the road shows generally stayed a week in each area. Michael’s Uncle, Jack McFadden, in keeping with the travelling show tradition married another show person and their sons were Jimmy, Henry, Teddy and George McFadden of the famous McFadden Shows of recent times.

Michael’s grandmother died in 1938 at a time when his father had temporarily retired from show business to live in Limerick City. Michael attended school in Limerick until 1942 by which time he had learned to play the violin. The McFadden family again took to the variety road show circuit by joining the Hayes Road Show owned by Mr. McFadden’s father-in-law. For a year young Michael followed the nomadic life, moving with his family and the travelling show from one venue to another. Every Monday it was a new town and a different school for Michael whose education continued while he was on the road. At the same time he played a violin solo at each nightly performance.

In 1943 the Hayes Road Show set up in Ballylinan, Co. Laois and when the tent stakes were pulled a week later the McFadden’s family caravan stayed behind. The time had come to settle down and Athy was the chosen town. There was no previous family link with Athy but a small house was rented in Blackparks on the Kilkenny Road and the caravan was sold off to Jimmy Lannigan in Ballybough.

Michael’s father was signed up by Paddy Gibbons of Barrack Street to work in England where workmen were scarce during the World War. After a few years the McFadden family moved to James’ Place which was nearer to town and just off the Kilkenny Road. While living in Blackparks the musically talented young Michael availed of the opportunity to play violin with the Hughes brothers of Rosebran. They were noted musicians in the traditional style and they imparted their enthusiasm for music and the playing of music to young Michael McFadden. In time Michael was to master in addition to the violin the guitar, trombone and piano accordion. He joined the Levitstown Ceile Band playing the piano accordion and sharing a platform with Jimmy and Paddy Hughes, Tom Fingleton and Mrs. Culley. It was to be the first of many musical combinations with which Michael was involved.

Later he joined the Sorrento Dance Band when it was reformed by Paudence Murphy in 1951. Paudence was Band Leader with Michael on piano accordion and vocals, Paudence and Andy Murphy on saxophone and Dinny Pender on drums. Michael ever the musical virtuoso went on to play the bass guitar when the emergence of Beatles and their music necessitated a shift in musical presentation.

For eleven years into the 1980’s Michael and Eamon Walsh played together under the name The Sapphires. It was the emergence of the sing along sessions in lounge bars, especially Malachy Corcorans in Leinster Street, now Kanes, which gave Michael the opportunity to develop as a solo artist. The piano accordion remains the main stay of the latter part of Michael’s musical career which is still going strong.

The show man’s son born outside Listowel Co. Kerry on 27 June, 1932 while the McFadden Show was on the road surely has show business in his blood. From the McFaddens of the Hippodrome of Belfast to Michael McFadden of Athy there are but three generations, all show business people entertaining others in the best show business tradition.

May he rest in peace.

 

Covid Signage, Kevin’s and Behan’s Prepare to Reopen

Castle and Seanchaí closed to the public in June 2020

Viewing platform by the river in June 2020.

The level of water in The Feale was very low before the deluge of Sunday June 15 when we had thunder, lightning and flash floods.

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Covid Signage at Spar in Market Street



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Kevin;s is being repainted before reopening.

Meanwhile across the road Behan’s Horseshoe has been beautifully painted.

I even persuaded the painters to pose for me.

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Ard Churam Dementia Day Centre

Photo: John Kelliher

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In Connemara in 1959


I dont know who took the photo but it looks a bit posed to me.  Brendan Behan is not exactly dressed for a day in the bog.

Listowel Town Square, Washday in 1960, Ballybunion’s New Toilet

Feale Sculpture with St. John’s in Listowel Town Square in June 2020.

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Jim and Betty Beasley out for a walk in June 2020

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A Poem for our Time

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Progress Report from Danny McDonnell


Public toilets are closed at the moment for health and safety reasons. Meanwhile Ballybunion’s new convenience is coming along nicely.

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Did your house have one of these?


Servis Supertwin twin tub washing machine, mid-1960s.



‘I can always remember my mother saying, “this is heaven, this has to be heaven…because it took the drudgery out of the hard work people had to do. – Maureen Gavan, Interviewed February 2017



The first phase of Electricity Supply Board’s (ESB) rural electrification programme began in 1946 and ran until 1965 with a post-development phase running into the 1970s. Although many rural women worked in offices and shops, as well as on the farm, the marriage bar and prevailing cultural attitudes meant that many women’s experiences of rural electrification were at home, where the kitchen was the focus of domestic work.

Kitchen Power: Women’s Experiences of Rural Electrification – National Museum of Ireland – Country Life, Castlebar, Mayo.

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Ballybunion


The new regulations allow us to travel anywhere in our own county. My first trip outside the 5km. limit wa to Ballybunion.


As I walked along the cliff walk I met my friend, Mary Moylan, and two of her friends taking a welcome breather from their roles as front line nurses in KUH.


It is very hard to see mobile home parks cordoned off in the height of the tourist season.



The Cliff House is preparing to open  for what’s left of the season.

Behans, Public Conveniences, St. Mary’s and People are Moving About Again



Knocker on Behan’s The Horseshoe in William Street, Listowel



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Roisin Meaney’s very apt Rhyme



Nursing homes opening the door, 
Visits not quite like before,
But mask, screen or glove
Won’t alter the love,
When we visit the folk we adore.

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Snapped in Childers’ Park in June 2020




Mary and Jimmy Deenihan out for their morning walk during the pandemic of 2020



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From the Papers



New York NY Irish American Advocate

13 June 1914

St. Columbkill’s prophesy is coming to pass—that the day would come when the Irish would return again in great numbers. On the steamship Baltic, which sailed last Thursday, I had the credit of having booked a larger number of passengers than any other agent in the United States. Among some of the cabin passengers who were booked at my office, No. 250 East Ninetieth- street, during the past few weeks were as follows: ——————-
Miss Mary Fitzgibbons, to Listowel, County Kerry; Miss Kathleen Brady, to the city of Dublin; Miss Katharine Lynch, to Kingscourt, County Cavan; Michael McKeon, to Drumlish, County Longford; Miss Bridget Moroney. to Kanturk. County Cork; Miss Delia Walsh, and her daughter Annie, to Tuam, County Galway; Miss Alice Maloney, to Tubbercurry, County Sligo; ———- Patrick Fitzgerald to Listowel Kerry; Mr. and Mrs. Sullivan, to Killarney, County Kerry; Miss Winifred Cannon (See paper for long list)
====================
New York NY Irish American Advocate 

…City of Limerick; Miss Julia Lyons, of Chicago, 111., to Listowel, County Kerry; Mr. Anthony Gavin and family, to Ballyhaunis, County Mayo; Mr …
…Jordan, to Templeloy, County Cavan; Mr. Michael McCarthy, to Listowel, County Kerry
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“We observe by the lists that among the cabin passengers to sail on the. Mauretania on July 1 is Mr. Thos, P. McCarthy, the well-known furniture, merchant of New York, and a native of Abbeyfeale. This will be Mr. McCarthy’s seventy-fourth trip, across the Atlantic, and if he makes two additional trips, bringing the total to seventy-six, the Cunard. company will present him with a complimentary round trip ticket.


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Toilet Inconvenience




Its June 2020. We are in the middle of a global pandemic. Hotels and restaurants are closed except for takeaway. Every toilet in Listowel is closed. This is just one of the many inconveniences of our lives nowadays.


Update:  It’s open now, June 17 2020


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Still Roped Off for another week








I’m looking forward to the day when we will be able to sit and pray.

 

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